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Your calendar data does not expire. Since calendar data counts against your Exchange quota, you can choose to remove or archive old calendar data.

2. Can I schedule shared resources such as a conference room?

Yes. Conference Rooms and equipment can be scheduled in Exchange.

3. What is the difference between an appointment, a meeting, and an all day event?

An appointment is an activity that involves only you. Use an appointment when you want to show that you're busy but no one else in your organization is involved. You might enter an appointment to block out time in your calendar when you need to meet with a client, visit the dentist, or research a project you're working on.

A meeting is similar to an appointment. The difference is that you invite other people to it.

An all day event is an activity that lasts all day long but doesn't block out time in your Calendar. Use an all day event when you want to show an activity that occurs on a specific day without having it clutter up all of the time slots in your calendar. Here are some types of entry for which you might use an all day event:

2. When I reach my maximum quota, can others still schedule me/can I still schedule appointments?

No, others cannot schedule you because the calendar notification message cannot be delivered. You will receive a message:

From: System Administrator

Sent:(date)

To: calendartest

Subject: Undeliverable: Test

Your message did not reach some or all of the intended recipients.

Subject: Test

Sent: (date)

The following recipient(s) could not be reached:

calendartest on (date)

The message could not be delivered because the recipient's mailbox is full.

(utk server #5.2.2)

Also, if you try to schedule an appointment for yourself, you will get the "Exceeded the size limit" message, so you can't schedule either.

3. Can resources be set to auto-accept meetings?

Yes. When a resource is created, it can be set to auto-confirm and decline conflicting meeting requests.

4. Can I recall a meeting request like I can an email?

No. Before you click Send, it's a good idea to check all the details because, unlike regular e-mail, there's no way to recall a meeting request once it has been sent.

Outlook 2007

1. How do I schedule a meeting?

·In Calendar, on the Actions menu, click Plan a Meeting.

·Click Add Others, and then click Add from Address Book.

·Find the user and click Required Optional, or Resources. (The Required and Optional attendees appear in the To box on the Appointment tab, and Resources appear in the Location box. To get details on a conference room, click it in the Resources list, and then click Properties.) Click OK.

·Click a time when all invitees are available. You can use AutoPick Next to find the next available free time for all invitees.

·Click Make Meeting.

·In the Subject box, type a description.

·Enter the location of the meeting in the Location box.

·If you want to make the meeting recurring, click Recurrence, and then select the recurrence pattern.

·Select any other options you want.

·Click Send.

2. How do I schedule an appointment?

·On the File menu, point to New, and then click Appointment.

·In the Subject box, type a description.

·In the Location box, enter the location.

·Enter start and end times.

·Select any other options you want.

·To make the appointment recur, click Recurrence.

·Click the frequency (Daily, Weekly, Monthly, Yearly) with which the appointment recurs, and then select options for the frequency.

·Click OK.

·Click Save and Close.

3. How do I schedule an all day event?

·In Calendar, on the Actions menu, click New All Day Event.

·In the Subject box, type a description.

·In the Location box, enter the location.

·Select any other options you want.

·Click Save and Close.

4. How can I make an appointment and/or meeting private?

·Create or open the appointment or meeting that you want to make private.

·Select the Private Button on the next to last ribbon on the Top Right of your open appointment.

·Important: You should not rely on the Private feature to prevent all access by other people to the details of an appointment, contact, or task. To make sure that other people cannot read the item you marked as private, do not grant them Read permission to your Calendar, Contacts, or Tasks folder. A person who is granted Read permission to access your folders could use programmatic methods or other e-mail applications to view details in a private item. Use the Private feature only when you share folders with people you trust. A better way to keep individual appointments private is to create them on a separate additional Calendar. Additional calendars cannot be shared.

5. How do I share my calendar?

In Outlook, your calendar is a folder that stores information about your meetings, appointments, and so on. Sharing your calendar makes all this information visible to others, that you select. Here's all you have to do to share:

·You would view your calendar, and on the Navigation Pane, under the Calendar folder, you would click Share My Calendar.

·Next you would add the name of the person you want to share with, and you would set permissions. Permission levels that you would be likely to use for calendar sharing include:

· Author�Can read or create calendar entries, and can modify or delete only entries that the author has created.

· Editor�Can read, create, modify, or delete all calendar entries, whether or not the editor has created them.

6. How do I view a shared calendar?

When you're viewing your calendar, you'll see a link in that pane called Open a Shared Calendar. To open the shared calendar, you would click this link, click the Name button, and select or type the name for the person sharing with you. Right away, you'd see the name listed under Other Calendars. When you use an Exchange account, you can share your Exchange Calendar. The recipient receives an e-mail notification that you have shared your Calendar. Also, you can request that the recipient share his or her Exchange Calendar with you.

·In Calendar, in the Navigation Pane, click Share My Calendar. NOTE: If you are using the Navigation Pane in Minimized view, in the Navigation Pane, click , click Navigation Pane, and then click Share My Calendar.

·Enter the name of the person to whom you want to grant access to view your Calendar.

·Type a subject for your e-mail message.

·Select this check box to grant the recipient permission to view your Calendar.

·Select this check box to ask the recipient to share his or her Calendar with you. This is optional.

·In the To box, enter the name of the recipient for the sharing invitation message.

·In the Subject box, type a subject for the e-mail message.

·You can request permissions to view the recipient's default Calendar. To do so, select the Request permission to view recipient's Calendar check box. NOTE:If you want to request access to a calendar other than the default Calendar, you must send an e-mail message asking for permissions to that particular calendar. This option requests access to the recipient's default Calendar only.

·In the message body, type any information that you want to include.

·Click Send.

·Review the confirmation dialog box, and then, if it is correct, click OK.

·Note: Incoming meeting notifications will appear temporarily in your Mail Inbox and then Outlook will take over, auto-accept the meeting for you, send an acceptance notification back to the meeting organizer, and move the meeting notification from your Mail Inbox to your Sent Items folder. Meetings are only auto-accepted while Outlook is running.

·The meeting will appear on your calendar as it was scheduled by the meeting organizer (Busy, Tentative, Free, or Out of Office).

8. How can I prevent the publishing/searching of my free/busy information?

To set your calendar so it won't publish your free/busy information, click on Calendar and choose Tools/Options/Preferences Tab/Calendar Options Button/Free-Busy Options... and set 'Publish = 0 month(s) of Calendar free/busy information on the server'. Click OK.

Note: This is not the recommended option if others need to schedule meetings with you.

To set a resource calendar (e.g., conference room), the resource owner must first sign onto the resource and then follow the steps above.

Note: People given rights to your calendar can still see it, but they cannot do a Free/Busy search against it. If there are already appointments on your calendar before these settings are changed, those appointments will still be searchable (e.g. entries added after the change will not be).

Note: These steps do not prevent someone from tentatively inviting you to a meeting.

9. Is it possible to prevent others from doing a free/busy time search on my calendar?

Yes. However, someone can still invite you to a meeting. Choose Tools/Options/ Preferences Tab/Calendar Options Button/Free-Busy Options and set Publish = 0 and set Update free/busy information on the server every _ minutes = 0. This will inhibit the publishing and/or searching of Free/Busy information for your calendar.

Note: you can still give a person rights to your calendar, but they cannot do a Free/Busy search against it. If there are already things on the calendar before you change these settings, they will still be searchable. Entries after the change will not be.

10. How do I open someone's calendar to view free/busy times?

Unless you have delegate rights, Outlook does not have an option where you can open and view an individual's calendar (even though you only see the "busy" time blocks).

To see someone's free/busy times in Outlook you have two options:

· Start a New Appointment and then add the individual as an attendee.

· Create a Group View, add the person(s) and then click the View Group Schedules button any time you want to view the group calendar(s).

·To create a group view, select Actions/View Group Schedules and click on the New button. Enter a "Group name" (e.g. IT Staff), enter the name(s) of the group member(s), and click OK.

1. Do I have to accept a meeting for it to appear on my calendar?

If your Outlook Mail client is configured to display the Reading Pane, and you preview the meeting notification OR if the Reading Pane is turned off, but you open the meeting notification, then the meeting will appear on your calendar as Tentative, even though you have not accepted the meeting.

In the Outlook 2007 client, you can also set the auto-accept option under Resource Scheduling for your individual account. To set this option, select Tools/Options/Preferences Tab/Calendar Options Button/Resource Scheduling. Check Automatically accept meetings and process cancellations.

Note: Meetings are only auto-accepted while Outlook is running.

2. When you invite someone to a meeting, does it appear as tentative on that person's calendar?

If their Outlook Mail client is configured to display the Reading Pane, and they preview the meeting notification OR if the Reading Pane is turned off, but they open the meeting notification, then the meeting will appear on their calendar as Tentative, even though they have not accepted the meeting.

3. Can I set delegate permissions for someone to view my meeting details?

Yes. Select Tools/Options and click on the Delegates tab. Click the Add button, on the new window search for who you wish to set as a delegate. Once found click the Add button in the lower left of this new window, click ok. You can now choose from three options:

· Reviewer - can only read items

· Author - can read and create items

· Editor - can read, create, and modify items

You can also choose to have your delegate receive a copy of meeting related messages sent to you. To make this change, go to Tools/Options and click on the Delegates tab. Check the box that says "Delegate receives copies of meeting-related messages sent to me".

4. I'm scheduling a meeting for others (not as a delegate). Can I remove myself as an attendee?

No, as the Organizer of the meeting you are a required attendee. However, to mark your time as free, right-click on the meeting and set Show Time As = Free.

5. If I have the Out of Office Assistant turned on and someone schedules me in a meeting, do they get the Out of Office notification?

Yes, the Out of Office auto response will be sent.

6. What happens if I have a "tentative" appointment on my calendar and then I delete the e-mail notification without accepting the appointment?

If you delete the email notification before you accept the "tentative" appointment, it will also delete the appointment from your calendar.

7. Can I set my calendar to display in other than 30 minute increments?

Right-click on the Time Bar in the Outlook client and select the increment you want. Unless you are in an alternative view this will not be displayed (i.e. Work Week, Week, Month)

8. How do I change the number of days displayed in the calendar?

In Calendar, click any of the following:

· Day

· Week (alt options listed are: Show work week and Show full week)

· Month

9. Can I create a "post-it" note at a specific time on my calendar?

No, you can't associate a note with a specific time. Notes in Outlook appear at the top of your calendar

10. Can I print more than one calendar at a time?

There isn't a way to print multiple calendars.

11. Can people invited to a meeting see who has accepted, declined...?

No, only the person that scheduled the meeting will have the Tracking button to see all attendee's responses (e.g., accepted, declined...).

12. When I add an All Day Event, is there an option to ask for no email response?

Yes, when you schedule an All Day Event and invite other people, you can specify that "No reply is necessary". To set this, after listing the people on your all day event, Respnses Button located in the center of your New Event and uncheck Request responses from the drop down menu. Note: people might still click on Accept, but no notice will be sent.

13. Can I change my default to "Don't send a response" for handling invitations to all day events?

The person being sent a calendar invitation cannot change the response default in Outlook 2007 but the meeting originator can change an option that will eliminate the response request. This can be useful when you send a meeting request or post your vacation time to a large number of attendees and tracking attendance is not necessary.

Follow these steps:

·On the File menu, point to New , and then click Meeting Request.

·On the Respnses Button located in the center of your Meeting Request and uncheck Request responses from the drop down menu.

· This turns off the Request Responses option. To turn back on requesting responses, on the Actions menu, click Request Responses

1. What is a "group schedule"?

The Calendar group schedule makes it easy for you to see the combined schedules of a number of people or resources at a glance. You can create and save multiple group schedules, each showing a group of people or resources. For example, one group schedule might contain all employees in a department. Another group schedule might contain all conference rooms in a building. A group schedule can include all of the contacts or resources from a public folder.

2. How do I create a group schedule?

You can create multiple group schedules in Outlook 2003. Each group schedule can include any selection of people, so you might create one schedule for all team members and other schedules for selected members.

Follow these steps to create a group schedule:

·In Outlook 2007, open your Calendar folder.

·On the Actions menu, click View Group Schedules to open the Group Schedules dialog box.

·Click New, type a name for the group schedule, and click OK. The group's schedule dialog box appears. Select group schedule dialog box.

·By adding a public Calendar folder to a group schedule, the calendar's events are available for scheduling purposes. You can incorporate group-wide or company-wide events into your schedule. You might use the public Calendar folder to identify company-wide meetings and other special events or to identify the availability of a specific resource.

3. I am not receiving email notifications when someone schedules me in a meeting - Why?

Any of the following will prevent email notifications from being sent:

· You have added a Delegate and selected 'Send meeting requests and responses only to my delegates, not to me'. (e.g., Tools | Options | Delegate).

· You have your calendar set to auto-accept meeting requests.

· You set 'Author' permissions on your calendar. This allows a person to open your calendar by choosing 'Open a Shared Calendar' and schedule a meeting directly on your calendar. Therefore, no email notification is sent.

1. How do I import data from my Corporate Time Calendar?

Selected File, choose Import and Export, Selecte Import an iCalendar (.ics) or vCalendar file (.vcs) Browse to where your saved .VCS file is located on your local system or shared drive. Hit Ok

2. Do I need to have "Automatically adjust clock for daylight savings changes" selected in Windows?

Several users have reported calendar appointment times changing in Exchange after implementing Daylight Savings Time. In each of the cases the problem was in settings on the local computer used to make the appointments. These computers did not have .Automatically adjust clock for daylight savings changes. selected in the Date and Time Properties. The reason this affects the appointment requires an understanding as to how Outlook schedules meetings and appointments.

Three factors affect the scheduling of a meeting and appointment in Outlook:

 The computer's clock setting (time).

 The computer's local time zone setting.

 The computer's daylight saving time adjustment setting.

Outlook time stamps the message request with the Greenwich Mean Time for the meeting. Outlook calculates Greenwich Mean Time by using the computer's clock time, plus or minus the local time zone adjustment, minus (depending upon the time of year) the daylight-saving time adjustment.

As soon as Outlook receives the meeting request it will calculate the meeting time for the recipient and schedule it on the calendar. If any of the three factors listed earlier are incorrect at that time, the meeting time will be incorrect. You cannot correct the time after the fact by correcting the factor in error; you must open the meeting request and manually correct the scheduled time.

There is no centralized process that Exchange Administrators can use to update the users calendar.

It is therefore highly recommended that .Automatically adjust clock for daylight savings changes. be selected.

To verify that you have "Automatically adjust clock for daylight savings changes" selected, do the following in Windows*:

·4. Right click on the clock in the System Tray (bottom right of your screen)

*Note that changing the setting in Windows changes the setting in Outlook and vice versa.

1. I have delegate rights to someone's calendar but when I try to print the calendar I get an error message "The messaging interface has returned an unknown error. If the problem persists, restart Outlook." Why?

This error will occur if you have been given delegate rights to someone's Calendar but not given rights to their Tasks and are trying to print their calendar using the Daily Style which includes printing task items. The delegate can resolve this problem by modifying the Print style to exclude task items. This can be done by selecting File | Print and clicking on the Define Styles button. Highlight Daily Style and click on the Edit button. From the drop down in the Options section change Daily Task List to No Tasks and click OK. You will now be able to print the calendar.

Alternatively, the calendar owner can modify delegate rights to include permissions for Tasks.

2. When trying to print from a shared calendar using Daily View i get an error message that says "The messaging interface has returned an unknown error." How do I resolve this?

There are two ways to solve this problem.

Method 1: Disable the TaskPad option

·On the File menu, click Print.

·Click Page Setup.

·On the Format tab, in the Options section change the drop down in Tasks to No Tasks